• 제목/요약/키워드: secreted proteins

검색결과 266건 처리시간 0.022초

Co-Expression of a Chimeric Protease Inhibitor Secreted by a Tumor-Targeted Salmonella Protects Therapeutic Proteins from Proteolytic Degradation

  • Quintero, David;Carrafa, Jamie;Vincent, Lena;Kim, Hee Jong;Wohlschlegel, James;Bermudes, David
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • 제28권12호
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    • pp.2079-2094
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    • 2018
  • Sunflower trypsin inhibitor (SFTI) is a 14-amino-acid bicyclic peptide that contains a single internal disulfide bond. We initially constructed chimeras of SFTI with N-terminal secretion signals from the Escherichia coli OmpA and Pseudomonas aeruginosa ToxA, but only detected small amounts of protease inhibition resulting from these constructs. A substantially higher degree of protease inhibition was detected from a C-terminal SFTI fusion with E. coli YebF, which radiated more than a centimeter from an individual colony of E. coli using a culture-based inhibitor assay. Inhibitory activity was further improved in YebF-SFTI fusions by the addition of a trypsin cleavage signal immediately upstream of SFTI, and resulted in production of a 14-amino-acid, disulfide-bonded SFTI free in the culture supernatant. To assess the potential of the secreted SFTI to protect the ability of a cytotoxic protein to kill tumor cells, we utilized a tumor-selective form of the Pseudomonas ToxA (OTG-PE38K) alone and expressed as a polycistronic construct with YebF-SFTI in the tumor-targeted Salmonella VNP20009. When we assessed the ability of toxin-containing culture supernatants to kill MDA-MB-468 breast cancer cells, the untreated OTG-PE38K was able to eliminate all detectable tumor cells, while pretreatment with trypsin resulted in the complete loss of anticancer cytotoxicity. However, when OTG-PE38K was co-expressed with YebF-SFTI, cytotoxicity was completely retained in the presence of trypsin. These data demonstrate SFTI chimeras are secreted in a functional form and that co-expression of protease inhibitors with therapeutic proteins by tumor-targeted bacteria has the potential to enhance the activity of therapeutic proteins by suppressing their degradation within a proteolytic environment.

CMTM5-v1, a four-transmembrane protein, presents a secreted form released via a vesicle-mediated secretory pathway

  • Li, Henan;Guo, Xiaohuan;Shao, Luning;Plate, Markus;Mo, Xiaoning;Wang, Yu;Han, Wenling
    • BMB Reports
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    • 제43권3호
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    • pp.182-187
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    • 2010
  • family (CMTM) is a novel family of proteins linking classical chemokines and the transmembrane 4 superfamily (TM4SF). Our earlier studies indicated several CMTM members (such as CKLF1 and CMTM2) have a secreted form. This is the first report of the secreted form of CMTM5-v1, the major RNA splicing form of CMTM5, which is produced as small vesicles (<100 nm diameter) and floats at a peak density of 1.19 g/ml on continuous sucrose gradients. CMTM5-v1 has no obvious co-localization with CD63 or Golgi complex. In addition, brefeldin A but not wortmannin can inhibit the secretion of CMTM5-v1. Our results suggest that CMTM5-v1 might be secreted via a different vesicle-mediated secretory pathway, which will be helpful for the studies of vesicle-mediated secretion and MARVEL domain-containing proteins.

The Orientation-Dependent Expression of Angiostatin-Endostatin Hybrid Proteins and Their Characterization for the Synergistic Effects of Antiangiogenesis

  • Paek, Sun-Yeol;Kim, Yong-Seok;Choi, Shin-Geon
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • 제20권10호
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    • pp.1430-1435
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    • 2010
  • Two angiostatic fusion proteins (hAE and hEA), differing in tandem connection manners, were constructed from human angiostatin (hAS) and endostatin (hES) proteins. These fusion proteins were then evaluated for synergistic antiangiogenic properties. The 65 kDa secreted fusion proteins, expressed in Pichia pastoris, were verified by both mass analysis and Western blotting assay. Luciferase reorter gene assay, using a VEGF promoter, revealed that the angiostatin-endostatin fusion protein (hAE), and its corresponding fusion gene delivery on human microvascular endothelial cells (HMEC-1), resulted in a more potent synergistic antiangiogenic effect than the endostatin-angiostatin fusion protein (hEA). These results suggest that the orientation of the fusion genes in hAS and hES might be an important factor in the development of therapeutic proteins.

Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium에서 Type III 분비장치의 표적단백질들의 분비신호 확인 및 Type III 분비장치를 이용한 Secretion Vector의 개발 (Identification of Secretion Signals of Target Proteins in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium and Construction of Secretion Vector using this Signal)

  • 최혁진;엄준호;조정아;이선;이경미;이인수;박용근
    • 미생물학회지
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    • 제36권4호
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    • pp.254-258
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    • 2000
  • 소장의 상피세포내로 세균 세포가 들어가는 과정(invasion)은 Salmonella의 감염에서 중요한 단계이다. invasion은 Salmonella type III 분비장치에 의해 분비되는 단백질들에 의해 유도된다. type III 분비단백질들은 특이하게, 일반적인 분비단백질들이 가지는 N-말단 분비 신호 펩타이드를 가지고 있지 않는 것을 알려져 있다. Yersinia에서의 최근 연구에서 type III 분비장치에 의해 인지되는 분비신호는 분비 단백질을 암호화하는 mRNA의 5'말단부의가 형성하는 2차 구조에 있을 것이라는 보고가 있다. 본 연구에서는 Salmonella type III 분비장치의 분비신호를 조사하기 위해 type III 분비단백질중 하나인 sopE를 택하여 ompR과의 translational fusion을 만들었다. translational fusion을 위해 사용된 sopE DNA절편은 프로모터와 시작 콘돈으로부터 10, 15 코돈을 포함하는 절편이다. Immunoblot으로 확인한 결과, OmpR을 포함하는 fusion 단백질이 형질전환 Salmonella 세포로부터 분비되었다. 이러한 결과는 Salmonella의 type III 분비신호가 분비단백질을 암호화하는 mRNA의 5'말단에 위치할 가능성을 제시하고 있다. 또한, 이러한 분비신호를 활용하여 유용한 외래 단백질을 세균 세포 내에서 효과적으로 생산, 분비할 수 있는 secretion vector의 원형을 개발하였다.

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Construction of Secretion Vectors Using the $\alpha$-amylase Signal Sequence of Bacillus subtilis NA64

  • Kim, Sung-Il;Lee, Se-Yong
    • Journal of Microbiology
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    • 제34권1호
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    • pp.74-81
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    • 1996
  • Two secretion vectors, pUBA240 and pUB340 were constructed by using the promoter and secretory signal region of the .alpha.-amylase gene from an .alpha.-amylase hyperproducing strain, Bacillus subtilis NA64. In this secretion vector system, various restriction enzyme sites are located immediately after the proregion of the .alpha.-amylase gene for easy replacement of various foregn structural genes. To evaluate this secretion vectors, the .betha.-lactamase gene of pBR322 was used as a reporter gene. The expressed and biologically active .betha.-lactamase was secreted into the culture broth from B. subtilis LKS86 transformants harboring each .betha.-lactamase secreting plasmid, pUBAbla and pUBSble. In both cases, more than 92% of expressed .betha.- lactamases were located idn the culture medium. The amount of the secreted .betha.-lactamase was about 80% of the total secreted proteins in the culture medium.

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A New Signal Sequence for Recombinant Protein Secretion in Pichia pastoris

  • Govindappa, Nagaraj;Hanumanthappa, Manjunatha;Venkatarangaiah, Krishna;Periyasamy, Sankar;Sreenivas, Suma;Soni, Rajeev;Sastry, Kedarnath
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • 제24권3호
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    • pp.337-345
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    • 2014
  • Pichia pastoris is one of the most widely used expression systems for the secretory expression of recombinant proteins. The secretory expression in P. pastoris usually makes use of the prepro $MAT{\alpha}$ sequence from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which has a dibasic amino acid cleavage site at the end of the signal sequence. This is efficiently processed by Kex2 protease, resulting in the secretion of high levels of proteins to the medium. However, the proteins that are having the internal accessible dibasic amino acids such as KR and RR in the coding region cannot be expressed using this signal sequence, as the protein will be fragmented. We have identified a new signal sequence of 18 amino acids from a P. pastoris protein that can secrete proteins to the medium efficiently. The PMT1-gene-inactivated P. pastoris strain secretes a ~30 kDa protein into the extracellular medium. We have identified this protein by determining its N-terminal amino acid sequence. The protein secreted has four DDDK concatameric internal repeats. This protein was not secreted in the wild-type P. pastoris under normal culture conditions. We show that the 18-amino-acid signal peptide at the N-terminal of this protein is useful for secretion of heterologous proteins in Pichia.

Role of the CCN protein family in cancer

  • Kim, Hyungjoo;Son, Seogho;Shin, Incheol
    • BMB Reports
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    • 제51권10호
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    • pp.486-492
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    • 2018
  • The CCN protein family is composed of six matricellular proteins, which serve regulatory roles rather than structural roles in the extracellular matrix. First identified as secreted proteins which are induced by oncogenes, the acronym CCN came from the names of the first three members: CYR61, CTGF, and NOV. All six members of the CCN family consist of four cysteine-rich modular domains. CCN proteins are known to regulate cell adhesion, proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis. In addition, CCN proteins are associated with cardiovascular and skeletal development, injury repair, inflammation, and cancer. They function either through binding to integrin receptors or by regulating the expression and activity of growth factors and cytokines. Given their diverse roles related to the pathology of certain diseases such as fibrosis, arthritis, atherosclerosis, diabetic nephropathy, retinopathy, and cancer, there are many emerging studies targeting CCN protein signaling pathways in attempts to elucidate their potentials as therapeutic targets.

Fungal and mushroom hydrophobins: A review

  • Wu, Yuanzheng;Li, Jishun;Yang, Hetong;Shin, Hyun-Jae
    • 한국버섯학회지
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    • 제15권1호
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    • pp.1-7
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    • 2017
  • Hydrophobins are surface active proteins that are produced by filamentous fungi including mushrooms. Their ability to self-assemble into an amphipathic membrane at any hydrophilic-hydrophobic interface is most intriguing. These small secreted proteins comprise of eight conserved cysteine residues which form four disulfide bridges and an extraordinary hydrophobic patch. Hydrophobins play critical roles in fungal (and/or mushrooms) growth as structural components and in the interaction of fungi and mushrooms with the environment. The biophysical and biochemical properties of the isolated proteins are remarkable, such as strong adhesion, high surface activity and the formation of various self-assembled structures. With the increasing demands of hydrophobins from fungi and mushroom sources, production and purification in large scale is under challenge. Various applications, ranging from food industries, cosmetics, nanotechnology, biosensors and electrodes, to biomaterials and pharmaceuticals are emerging and a bright future is foreseen.

Native and Foreign Proteins Secreted by the Cupriavidus metallidurans Type II System and an Alternative Mechanism

  • Xu, Houjuan;Denny, Timothy P.
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • 제27권4호
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    • pp.791-807
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    • 2017
  • The type II secretion system (T2SS), which transports selected periplasmic proteins across the outer membrane, has rarely been studied in nonpathogens or in organisms classified as Betaproteobacteria. Therefore, we studied Cupriavidus metallidurans (Cme), a facultative chemilithoautotroph. Gel analysis of extracellular proteins revealed no remarkable differences between the wild type and the T2SS mutants. However, enzyme assays revealed that native extracellular alkaline phosphatase is a T2SS substrate, because activity was 10-fold greater for the wild type than a T2SS mutant. In Cme engineered to produce three Ralstonia solanacearum (Rso) exoenzymes, at least 95% of their total activities were extracellular, but unexpectedly high percentages of these exoenzymes remained extracellular in T2SS mutants cultured in rich broth. These conditions appear to permit an alternative secretion process, because neither cell lysis nor periplasmic leakage was observed when Cme produced a Pectobacterium carotovorum exoenzyme, and wild-type Cme cultured in minimal medium secreted 98% of Rso polygalacturonase, but 92% of this exoenzyme remained intracellular in T2SS mutants. We concluded that Cme has a functional T2SS despite lacking any abundant native T2SS substrates. The efficient secretion of three foreign exoenzymes by Cme is remarkable, but so too is the indication of an alternative secretion process in rich culture conditions. When not transiting the T2SS, we suggest that Rso exoenzymes are probably selectively packaged into outer membrane vesicles. Phylogenetic analysis of T2SS proteins supports the existence of at least three T2SS subfamilies, and we propose that Cme, as a representative of the Betaproteobacteria, could become a new useful model system for studying T2SS substrate specificity.